Flying Turtles dominate Texas Wiffle Ball League standings with 22-0-2 start
The Flying Turtles have turned 24 games into a 22-0-2 start and a 146-run cushion at the top of the Texas Wiffle Ball League standings. They sit on 46 points with a .917 winning percentage and a W4 streak, numbers that make this less like a tight pennant race and more like a team forcing everyone else to play catch-up.
The run differential tells the real story. Through 24 games, the Flying Turtles have scored 198 runs and allowed only 52, which works out to 8.25 runs per game on offense and just 2.17 surrendered on the other side. A margin that large usually means a club is winning in every phase, and the standings line backs that up with home and away splits that show the record is not built on one friendly setup or one hot weekend. It is built on repeated control.

That matters because the TWBL is tracking this season in a way that leaves plenty of paper trail behind the dominance. The league’s 2026 schedule page lays out a month-by-month calendar with dozens of games, while the standings page links back through the 2025, 2024, 2023 and 2022 archives. Dallas is the league base, Spirit Park is the home venue, and the site also carries power rankings, team pages, player pages and weekly recap articles. In other words, this is not a one-page snapshot. It is a full statistical ecosystem, and the Flying Turtles are the team standing above it.

The league has also had the Flying Turtles on its radar all season. A 2026 preseason team preview featured the club, and the schedule pages show them in matchups against Blue Ballers, Cosby Show, Crooked Rooks and Who’s Your Daddy during the year. That kind of regular presence matters now, because a frontrunner with a record this clean carries pressure into every remaining week. Every opponent gets a shot at the league leader, and every scoreline gets read through the same question: is anybody capable of slowing this group down?

Connor Retterath gives the team another named piece of that picture. The Flying Turtles player from Plano, Texas is listed at 23 years old, 5-foot-10 and 190 pounds, bats and throws right-handed, and carries the nickname Picasso. His player page notes that splits tracking began in 2023, a reminder that the league has been building detailed profiles long enough for this run to stand out as more than a fast start. Right now, the math says the Flying Turtles are not merely leading the TWBL. They are setting the pace everyone else has to solve.